The Rosette star formation region is located about 5,000 light years from Earth. X-rays reveal hundreds of young stars clustered in the center of a new image taken by the Chandra X-ray Observatory, and additional fainter clusters on either side. The Rosette Nebula has long been a favorite target of amateur astronomers in the constellation Monoceros, the Unicorn, and can be occasionally seen by small telescopes from earth.

The distribution of galaxies in the universe is patchy. Galaxies are bound together in clusters made of stars, hot gas and invisible dark matter. These galaxy clusters are part of a cosmic web of filaments, nodes and empty voids that has been building up over 13 billion years. How do we observe this structure, and how do we use gravitational lensing and satellite X-ray observations to measure its mass? How do galaxy clusters trace the past expansion of the universe and reveal our future? This lecture highlights data from the Dark Energy Survey, today’s largest cosmic survey, to answer these questions.
About the speaker:
SLACResearch Scientist Eli Rykoff has been weighing the universe for over a decade. He received his PhD from the University of Michigan in 2005, where he built a worldwide network of automated telescopes for following gamma-ray bursts, the most energetic explosions in the universe. After graduating, he transitioned to studying galaxy clusters, which evolve over billions of years rather than fractions of seconds, and did postdoctoral research at the University of California, Santa Barbara and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Rykoff moved to SLAC in 2012, where he works on galaxy cluster finding and other studies for the Dark Energy Survey and the upcoming Large Synoptic Survey Telescope. He also develops educational astronomy apps for the iPhone and iPad, including CosmoCalc, a full-featured cosmological calculator, and GravLens3, a gravitational lens simulator.

published:06 Feb 2017

views:8536

Lynx is one of four flagship concepts for the next great space telescope.
NASA has funded a series of studies of four concepts that will in less than a year's time produce candidate designs for a major space observatory to begin construction later next decade. One of these has been dubbed Lynx, an x-ray “flagship" mission will probe some of the most explosive and high-energy objects in our Universe, and will provide insight into the seeds of black holes, the formation and evolution of galaxies and clusters of galaxies and even of the stars themselves.
Please join our regular hosts Tony Darnell and Harley Thronson, as they discuss with Drs. Alexey Vikhlinin from the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory and Feryal Ozel from the University of Arizona the science that will be revealed by a telescope investigating the x-ray universe.
This is an informal, relaxed chat, so we hope that you can join us live and ask questions or leave comments for our guests.
Learn more here: https://www.lynxobservatory.com
Visuals from hangout available here:
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1E8WAxeRmkIDZzdxTCDVuwJ8Sw0U3IMDL
Join our Discord Chat Server here: https://discord.gg/nqGpvtK

published:20 Sep 2018

views:1438

More space news and info at: http://www.coconutsciencelab.com - Abell 3411 and Abell 3412 are a pair of colliding galaxy clusters located about 2 billion light years from Earth. By combining X-rays from Chandra with data from other telescopes, astronomers were able to probe what was really happening in this remarkable system.
They found evidence that supermassive black holes have erupted within the merging clusters. At least one of these black hole eruptions has produced a tightly-wound, rotating magnetic funnel, which in turn has created a jet of high-speed and energetic particles.
These pumped up particles have then been swept up in the collision between Abell 3411 and Abell 3412, creating a cosmic double whammy. The result of all of this? The creation of a stupendous particle accelerator that produces energies far above anything that could ever be created here on Earth.
Please rate and comment, thanks!

published:11 Jan 2017

views:402

http://www.facebook.com/ScienceReason ... Hubblecast 37: EnergeticStar Formation - Bubbles And BabyStars
This Hubblecast features a spectacular new NASA/ESAHubble Space Telescope image - one of the largest ever released of a star-forming region. It highlights N11, part of a complex network of gas clouds and star clusters within our neighbouring galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud. This region of energetic star formation is one of the most active in the nearby Universe.
---
Please SUBSCRIBE to Science & Reason:
• http://www.youtube.com/Best0fScience
• http://www.youtube.com/ScienceTV
• http://www.youtube.com/FFreeThinker
---
Hubble captures bubbles and baby stars
The Large Magellanic Cloud contains many bright bubbles of glowing gas. One of the largest and most spectacular has the name LHA 120-N 11, from its listing in a catalogue compiled by the American astronomer and astronaut Karl Henize in 1956, and is informally known as N11. Close up, the billowing pink clouds of glowing gas make N11 resemble a puffy swirl of fairground candy floss. From further away, its distinctive overall shape led some observers to nickname it the BeanNebula. The dramatic and colourful features visible in the nebula are the telltale signs of star formation. N11 is a well-studied region that extends over 1000 light-years. It is the second largest star-forming region within the Large Magellanic Cloud and has produced some of the most massive stars known.
It is the process of star formation that gives N11 its distinctive look. Three successive generations of stars, each of which formed further away from the centre of the nebula than the last, have created shells of gas and dust. These shells were blown away from the newborn stars in the turmoil of their energetic birth and early life, creating the ring shapes so prominent in this image.
Beans are not the only terrestrial shapes to be found in this spectacular high resolution image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. In the upper left is the red bloom of nebula LHA 120-N 11A. Its rose-like petals of gas and dust are illuminated from within, thanks to the radiation from the massive hot stars at its centre. N11A is relatively compact and dense and is the site of the most recent burst of star development in the region.
Other star clusters abound in N11, including NGC 1761 at the bottom of the image, which is a group of massive hot young stars busily pouring intense ultraviolet radiation out into space. Although it is much smaller than our own galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud is a very vigorous region of star formation. Studying these stellar nurseries helps astronomers understand a lot more about how stars are born and their ultimate development and lifespan.
Both the Large Magellanic Cloud and its small companion, the Small Magellanic Cloud, are easily seen with the unaided eye and have always been familiar to people living in the southern hemisphere. The credit for bringing these galaxies to the attention of Europeans is usually given to Portuguese explorerFernando de Magellan and his crew, who viewed it on their 1519 sea voyage. However, the Persian astronomer Abd Al-Rahman Al Sufi and the Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci recorded the Large Magellanic Cloud in 964 and 1503 respectively.
• http://www.spacetelescope.org/news/heic1011/
---
A rose blooming in space
Resembling a delicate rose floating in space, the nebula N11A is seen in a new light in a true-colour image taken by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. Fierce radiation from massive stars embedded at the centre of N11A illuminates the surrounding gas with a soft fluorescent glow.
N11A lies within a spectacular star-forming region in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a small nearby companion galaxy to our own Milky Way Galaxy, visible from the Southern Hemisphere. This nebula is particularly interesting for astronomers since it is the smallest and most compact nebula in that region and represents the most recent massive star formation event there.
The excellent imaging power of Hubble has enabled astronomers to see this nebula in more detail and to study the structure of the hot gas envelope as well as the stars embedded in its centre. Shocks and strong stellar winds from the recently born, massive stars in the bright core of N11A have scooped out a cavity in the gas and dust. The fierce radiation causes the surrounding gas to fluoresce in a way similar to a neon light.
• http://www.spacetelescope.org/news/heic0210/
.

Japanese designer and architect Akihisa Hirata describes his installation for Panasonic, part of INTERNI: HYBRID ARCHITECTURE & DESIGN in Milan2013.
The main presentation is a 30-meter-long miniature cityscape, with 6,000 solar panels covering clusters of buildings. The panels create rolling hills over the manmade city. Visual and acoustic effects emanate from 16 projectors with speakers dotted about the hillsides.
Follow #beopen for all the best form the world of Design, Architecture and Arts.
http://www.beopenfuture.com

published:24 Apr 2013

views:94

Galaxy clusters are the largest gravitationally bound objects in our Universe and are unique laboratories to study fundamental questions in astrophysics. Galaxy clusters grow by mergers with smaller subclusters and galaxy groups. In this talk, I will discuss how merging galaxy clusters can act as giant particle accelerators, producing extremely energetic cosmic rays.
Host: Charles Alcock
Speaker: Reinout van Weeren

Trousers

Trousers (pants in North America) are an item of clothing worn from the waist to the ankles, covering both legs separately (rather than with cloth extending across both legs as in robes, skirts, and dresses).

In the UK the word "pants" generally means underwear and not trousers.Shorts are similar to trousers, but with legs that come down only to around the area of the knee, higher or lower depending on the style of the garment. To distinguish them from shorts, trousers may be called "long trousers" in certain contexts such as school uniform, where tailored shorts may be called "short trousers", especially in the UK.

In most of the Western world, trousers have been worn since ancient times and throughout the Medieval period, becoming the most common form of lower-body clothing for adult males in the modern world, although shorts are also widely worn, and kilts and other garments may be worn in various regions and cultures. Breeches were worn instead of trousers in early modern Europe by some men in higher classes of society. Since the mid-20th century, trousers have increasingly been worn by women as well. Jeans, made of denim, are a form of trousers for casual wear, now widely worn all over the world by both sexes. Shorts are often preferred in hot weather or for some sports and also often by children and teenagers. Trousers are worn on the hips or waist and may be held up by their own fastenings, a belt or suspenders (braces). Leggings are form-fitting trousers, of a clingy material, often knittedcotton and spandex (elastane).

See also

High Energy (The Supremes song)

"High Energy" is a dance/disco song by The Supremes. Released as the album's title-track single in 1976 from their penultimate album High Energy, this energic, sound-bursting tune featured lead vocals by Susaye Greene. Greene, new to the group, was brought in to dub her vocals although Scherrie Payne had already recorded lead vocals prior to Greene's entry into the trio. As such, this was the final single to feature former member Cindy Birdsong's vocals, and the sixth and final single of the group to feature four members. Written by Harold Beatty, Brian Holland and Edward Holland, Jr., the song peaked at position nine on the dance/disco charts later that same year.

History

In 1946, American theoretical astrophysicist Lyman Spitzer was the first to conceive the idea of a telescope in outer space, a decade before the Soviet Union launched the first satellite, Sputnik 1.

Spitzer's proposal called for a large telescope that would not be hindered by Earth's atmosphere. After lobbying in the 1960s and 70s for such a system to be built, Spitzer's vision ultimately materialized into the Hubble Space Telescope, which was launched on April 24, 1990 by the Space Shuttle Discovery (STS-31).

List of government space agencies

As of 2015, 70 different government space agencies are in existence; 13 of those have launch capability. Six government space agencies - the China National Space Administration (CNSA), the European Space Agency (ESA), the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the Russian Federal Space Agency (RFSA or Roscosmos) - have full launch capabilities; these include the ability to launch and recover multiple satellites, deploy cryogenic rocket engines and operate extraterrestrial probes. Only three currently operating government space agencies in the world - NASA, the RFSA and the CNSA - are capable of human spaceflight.

The name given is the English version, with the native language version below. The acronym given is the most common acronym: this can either be the acronym of the English version (e.g. JAXA), or the acronym in the native language. Where there are multiple acronyms in common use, the English one is given first.

Chandra Presents the Rosette Nebula

The Rosette star formation region is located about 5,000 light years from Earth. X-rays reveal hundreds of young stars clustered in the center of a new image taken by the Chandra X-ray Observatory, and additional fainter clusters on either side. The Rosette Nebula has long been a favorite target of amateur astronomers in the constellation Monoceros, the Unicorn, and can be occasionally seen by small telescopes from earth.

Public Lecture | Galaxy Clusters and the Life and Death of the Universe

Public Lecture | Galaxy Clusters and the Life and Death of the Universe

Public Lecture | Galaxy Clusters and the Life and Death of the Universe

The distribution of galaxies in the universe is patchy. Galaxies are bound together in clusters made of stars, hot gas and invisible dark matter. These galaxy clusters are part of a cosmic web of filaments, nodes and empty voids that has been building up over 13 billion years. How do we observe this structure, and how do we use gravitational lensing and satellite X-ray observations to measure its mass? How do galaxy clusters trace the past expansion of the universe and reveal our future? This lecture highlights data from the Dark Energy Survey, today’s largest cosmic survey, to answer these questions.
About the speaker:
SLACResearch Scientist Eli Rykoff has been weighing the universe for over a decade. He received his PhD from the University of Michigan in 2005, where he built a worldwide network of automated telescopes for following gamma-ray bursts, the most energetic explosions in the universe. After graduating, he transitioned to studying galaxy clusters, which evolve over billions of years rather than fractions of seconds, and did postdoctoral research at the University of California, Santa Barbara and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Rykoff moved to SLAC in 2012, where he works on galaxy cluster finding and other studies for the Dark Energy Survey and the upcoming Large Synoptic Survey Telescope. He also develops educational astronomy apps for the iPhone and iPad, including CosmoCalc, a full-featured cosmological calculator, and GravLens3, a gravitational lens simulator.

58:00

The Lynx Space Telescope: A Flagship Concept to Probe the Energetic Universe

The Lynx Space Telescope: A Flagship Concept to Probe the Energetic Universe

The Lynx Space Telescope: A Flagship Concept to Probe the Energetic Universe

Lynx is one of four flagship concepts for the next great space telescope.
NASA has funded a series of studies of four concepts that will in less than a year's time produce candidate designs for a major space observatory to begin construction later next decade. One of these has been dubbed Lynx, an x-ray “flagship" mission will probe some of the most explosive and high-energy objects in our Universe, and will provide insight into the seeds of black holes, the formation and evolution of galaxies and clusters of galaxies and even of the stars themselves.
Please join our regular hosts Tony Darnell and Harley Thronson, as they discuss with Drs. Alexey Vikhlinin from the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory and Feryal Ozel from the University of Arizona the science that will be revealed by a telescope investigating the x-ray universe.
This is an informal, relaxed chat, so we hope that you can join us live and ask questions or leave comments for our guests.
Learn more here: https://www.lynxobservatory.com
Visuals from hangout available here:
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1E8WAxeRmkIDZzdxTCDVuwJ8Sw0U3IMDL
Join our Discord Chat Server here: https://discord.gg/nqGpvtK

2:20

Violent Galaxy Cluster Collision Creates Particle Beam | Video

Violent Galaxy Cluster Collision Creates Particle Beam | Video

Violent Galaxy Cluster Collision Creates Particle Beam | Video

More space news and info at: http://www.coconutsciencelab.com - Abell 3411 and Abell 3412 are a pair of colliding galaxy clusters located about 2 billion light years from Earth. By combining X-rays from Chandra with data from other telescopes, astronomers were able to probe what was really happening in this remarkable system.
They found evidence that supermassive black holes have erupted within the merging clusters. At least one of these black hole eruptions has produced a tightly-wound, rotating magnetic funnel, which in turn has created a jet of high-speed and energetic particles.
These pumped up particles have then been swept up in the collision between Abell 3411 and Abell 3412, creating a cosmic double whammy. The result of all of this? The creation of a stupendous particle accelerator that produces energies far above anything that could ever be created here on Earth.
Please rate and comment, thanks!

4:38

Energetic Star Formation: Bubbles And Baby Stars

Energetic Star Formation: Bubbles And Baby Stars

Energetic Star Formation: Bubbles And Baby Stars

http://www.facebook.com/ScienceReason ... Hubblecast 37: EnergeticStar Formation - Bubbles And BabyStars
This Hubblecast features a spectacular new NASA/ESAHubble Space Telescope image - one of the largest ever released of a star-forming region. It highlights N11, part of a complex network of gas clouds and star clusters within our neighbouring galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud. This region of energetic star formation is one of the most active in the nearby Universe.
---
Please SUBSCRIBE to Science & Reason:
• http://www.youtube.com/Best0fScience
• http://www.youtube.com/ScienceTV
• http://www.youtube.com/FFreeThinker
---
Hubble captures bubbles and baby stars
The Large Magellanic Cloud contains many bright bubbles of glowing gas. One of the largest and most spectacular has the name LHA 120-N 11, from its listing in a catalogue compiled by the American astronomer and astronaut Karl Henize in 1956, and is informally known as N11. Close up, the billowing pink clouds of glowing gas make N11 resemble a puffy swirl of fairground candy floss. From further away, its distinctive overall shape led some observers to nickname it the BeanNebula. The dramatic and colourful features visible in the nebula are the telltale signs of star formation. N11 is a well-studied region that extends over 1000 light-years. It is the second largest star-forming region within the Large Magellanic Cloud and has produced some of the most massive stars known.
It is the process of star formation that gives N11 its distinctive look. Three successive generations of stars, each of which formed further away from the centre of the nebula than the last, have created shells of gas and dust. These shells were blown away from the newborn stars in the turmoil of their energetic birth and early life, creating the ring shapes so prominent in this image.
Beans are not the only terrestrial shapes to be found in this spectacular high resolution image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. In the upper left is the red bloom of nebula LHA 120-N 11A. Its rose-like petals of gas and dust are illuminated from within, thanks to the radiation from the massive hot stars at its centre. N11A is relatively compact and dense and is the site of the most recent burst of star development in the region.
Other star clusters abound in N11, including NGC 1761 at the bottom of the image, which is a group of massive hot young stars busily pouring intense ultraviolet radiation out into space. Although it is much smaller than our own galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud is a very vigorous region of star formation. Studying these stellar nurseries helps astronomers understand a lot more about how stars are born and their ultimate development and lifespan.
Both the Large Magellanic Cloud and its small companion, the Small Magellanic Cloud, are easily seen with the unaided eye and have always been familiar to people living in the southern hemisphere. The credit for bringing these galaxies to the attention of Europeans is usually given to Portuguese explorerFernando de Magellan and his crew, who viewed it on their 1519 sea voyage. However, the Persian astronomer Abd Al-Rahman Al Sufi and the Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci recorded the Large Magellanic Cloud in 964 and 1503 respectively.
• http://www.spacetelescope.org/news/heic1011/
---
A rose blooming in space
Resembling a delicate rose floating in space, the nebula N11A is seen in a new light in a true-colour image taken by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. Fierce radiation from massive stars embedded at the centre of N11A illuminates the surrounding gas with a soft fluorescent glow.
N11A lies within a spectacular star-forming region in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a small nearby companion galaxy to our own Milky Way Galaxy, visible from the Southern Hemisphere. This nebula is particularly interesting for astronomers since it is the smallest and most compact nebula in that region and represents the most recent massive star formation event there.
The excellent imaging power of Hubble has enabled astronomers to see this nebula in more detail and to study the structure of the hot gas envelope as well as the stars embedded in its centre. Shocks and strong stellar winds from the recently born, massive stars in the bright core of N11A have scooped out a cavity in the gas and dust. The fierce radiation causes the surrounding gas to fluoresce in a way similar to a neon light.
• http://www.spacetelescope.org/news/heic0210/
.

Energetic Energies by Akihisa Hirata

Japanese designer and architect Akihisa Hirata describes his installation for Panasonic, part of INTERNI: HYBRID ARCHITECTURE & DESIGN in Milan2013.
The main presentation is a 30-meter-long miniature cityscape, with 6,000 solar panels covering clusters of buildings. The panels create rolling hills over the manmade city. Visual and acoustic effects emanate from 16 projectors with speakers dotted about the hillsides.
Follow #beopen for all the best form the world of Design, Architecture and Arts.
http://www.beopenfuture.com

56:34

pH Lecture: The Universe’s Largest Particle Accelerators

pH Lecture: The Universe’s Largest Particle Accelerators

pH Lecture: The Universe’s Largest Particle Accelerators

Galaxy clusters are the largest gravitationally bound objects in our Universe and are unique laboratories to study fundamental questions in astrophysics. Galaxy clusters grow by mergers with smaller subclusters and galaxy groups. In this talk, I will discuss how merging galaxy clusters can act as giant particle accelerators, producing extremely energetic cosmic rays.
Host: Charles Alcock
Speaker: Reinout van Weeren

Original video. This video shows orbs as intelligent & emotional cosmic energy particles in the forms of light & plasma. The orbs inside the orb cluster nucleus (the glowing orb cluster) are larger than the orbs outside of the orb cluster nucleus. There are fewer orb clusters in the glowing orb cluster nucleus than outside of the orb cluster nucleus in the general body of orb clusters comprising the grand orb cluster. The orb clusters inside the orb cluster nucleus are larger in size and are revolving counter-clockwise at a high velocities and high vibrations frequencies rates. Their velocities of counter-clockwise revoulutions and their high vibrations frequencies are creating a plasma state orb cluster nucleus which at times attains a state of pure energy/light - this happens when the velocities and vibrations frequencies of the orb clusters inside the nucleus are at their highest levels - these changes are shown in this video. The orb clusters outside of the glowing orb cluster nucleus are revolving counter-clockwise around the glowing orb cluster nucleus at extreme velocities and are at high vibration frequencies - traveling counter-clockwise around the nucleus well in excess of 1000km/hour and are hard to see due to their high acceleration rate. They are moving right to left over the roof, in the air and all around the glowing orb cluster nucleus counter-clockwise in all directions without colliding with one another or interfering with one another's paths, direction, velocities, etc. The right to left movement is the easiest to notice and to watch on the screen but the movement is counter-clockwise & right to left in all directions even when it is not appearant to the eyes. The orb clusters in this video are intelligent cosmic energy microparticles traveling at extreme high velocities at high vibration frequencies. They are so small, move so fast & their vibration frquencies are so high that they pass right through solid animate and inanimate matter - cell and atomic/sub-atomic structure, etc., without even being felt or seen. This does not mean however, that these intelligent cosmic particles have no effect on animate & inanimate physical matter. They can & do change cell, membrane, atomic & subatomic structures in living organisms and inanimate objects of solid matter. They can alter living organisms on a microscopic cellular level causing changes, upgrades, deformities, leaps in intelligence or changes in mental patterns so that these living organisms will experience changes in perception via senses and understanding of themselves, their role in their world and the meaning of their existance due to changes in their brain wave pattern activities and changes in their electrochemical impulses in their brain together with external changes of their environment and the effect of the electromagnetic field/energy and vibration frquencies changes all around them in the physical world. These intelligent cosmic energy particles can also influence changes and alter the periodic table of elements by adding or subtracting from the atomic number thereby changing the qualitative state of physical objects by increasing or decreasing the energy values in their atomic/sub- atomic structure. Orbs/UEBs/intelligent cosmic energy particles have been around on Earth for the length of its entire existence and have shaped life and matter continuously for billions of years. These intelligent cosmic particles shape life and matter in our entire universe and affect the energy intensities, quantities & patterns even inside black holes. These intelligent cosmic energy particles operate in the electromagnetic spectrum and shape the universe on an electromagnetic grid network. They can operate on all energy vibration frequencies including, electromagnetism, radiation, cosmic radiation, solar radiation/ultraviolet, dark matter, matter, gravitational force, visible light spectrum, etc. are but a few examples. These intelligent cosmic energy particles are multidimensional cluster organisms/living beings of extraterrestrial, extradimensional nature and origin with respect to human beings, the Earth, life on Earth, etc., which have the capability to transform from energy states into physical forms - either as living/animate organisms/beings or as physical/solid objects in the three dimensional universe.
Thank you for viewing.

Chandra Presents the Rosette Nebula

The Rosette star formation region is located about 5,000 light years from Earth. X-rays reveal hundreds of young stars clustered in the center of a new image taken by the Chandra X-ray Observatory, and additional fainter clusters on either side. The Rosette Nebula has long been a favorite target of amateur astronomers in the constellation Monoceros, the Unicorn, and can be occasionally seen by small telescopes from earth.

Public Lecture | Galaxy Clusters and the Life and Death of the Universe

The distribution of galaxies in the universe is patchy. Galaxies are bound together in clusters made of stars, hot gas and invisible dark matter. These galaxy clusters are part of a cosmic web of filaments, nodes and empty voids that has been building up over 13 billion years. How do we observe this structure, and how do we use gravitational lensing and satellite X-ray observations to measure its mass? How do galaxy clusters trace the past expansion of the universe and reveal our future? This lecture highlights data from the Dark Energy Survey, today’s largest cosmic survey, to answer these questions.
About the speaker:
SLACResearch Scientist Eli Rykoff has been weighing the universe for over a decade. He received his PhD from the University of Michigan in 2005, where he built a worldw...

published: 06 Feb 2017

The Lynx Space Telescope: A Flagship Concept to Probe the Energetic Universe

Lynx is one of four flagship concepts for the next great space telescope.
NASA has funded a series of studies of four concepts that will in less than a year's time produce candidate designs for a major space observatory to begin construction later next decade. One of these has been dubbed Lynx, an x-ray “flagship" mission will probe some of the most explosive and high-energy objects in our Universe, and will provide insight into the seeds of black holes, the formation and evolution of galaxies and clusters of galaxies and even of the stars themselves.
Please join our regular hosts Tony Darnell and Harley Thronson, as they discuss with Drs. Alexey Vikhlinin from the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory and Feryal Ozel from the University of Arizona the science that will be revealed by...

published: 20 Sep 2018

Violent Galaxy Cluster Collision Creates Particle Beam | Video

More space news and info at: http://www.coconutsciencelab.com - Abell 3411 and Abell 3412 are a pair of colliding galaxy clusters located about 2 billion light years from Earth. By combining X-rays from Chandra with data from other telescopes, astronomers were able to probe what was really happening in this remarkable system.
They found evidence that supermassive black holes have erupted within the merging clusters. At least one of these black hole eruptions has produced a tightly-wound, rotating magnetic funnel, which in turn has created a jet of high-speed and energetic particles.
These pumped up particles have then been swept up in the collision between Abell 3411 and Abell 3412, creating a cosmic double whammy. The result of all of this? The creation of a stupendous particle accelera...

published: 11 Jan 2017

Energetic Star Formation: Bubbles And Baby Stars

http://www.facebook.com/ScienceReason ... Hubblecast 37: EnergeticStar Formation - Bubbles And BabyStars
This Hubblecast features a spectacular new NASA/ESAHubble Space Telescope image - one of the largest ever released of a star-forming region. It highlights N11, part of a complex network of gas clouds and star clusters within our neighbouring galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud. This region of energetic star formation is one of the most active in the nearby Universe.
---
Please SUBSCRIBE to Science & Reason:
• http://www.youtube.com/Best0fScience
• http://www.youtube.com/ScienceTV
• http://www.youtube.com/FFreeThinker
---
Hubble captures bubbles and baby stars
The Large Magellanic Cloud contains many bright bubbles of glowing gas. One of the largest and most spectacular has the nam...

published: 22 Jun 2010

AHEAD - Hot and Energetic Universe. FD trailer

The planetarium documentary “The Hot and EnergeticUniverse” presents with the use of Immersive Visualizations and real images the achievements of the modern astronomy, the most advanced terrestrial and orbital observatories, the basic principles electromagnetic radiation and the natural phenomena related to the High Energy Astrophysics. High Energy Astrophysics plays a key role in understanding the universe. These radiations reveal the processes in the hot and violent universe. High Energy Astrophysics probes hot gas in clusters of galaxies, which are the most massive objects in the universe. It also probes hot gas accreting around supermassive black holes in the centers of galaxies. Finally, high energy radiation provides important information about our own galaxy, neutron stars, superno...

published: 04 Aug 2017

Energetic Energies by Akihisa Hirata

Japanese designer and architect Akihisa Hirata describes his installation for Panasonic, part of INTERNI: HYBRID ARCHITECTURE & DESIGN in Milan2013.
The main presentation is a 30-meter-long miniature cityscape, with 6,000 solar panels covering clusters of buildings. The panels create rolling hills over the manmade city. Visual and acoustic effects emanate from 16 projectors with speakers dotted about the hillsides.
Follow #beopen for all the best form the world of Design, Architecture and Arts.
http://www.beopenfuture.com

published: 24 Apr 2013

pH Lecture: The Universe’s Largest Particle Accelerators

Galaxy clusters are the largest gravitationally bound objects in our Universe and are unique laboratories to study fundamental questions in astrophysics. Galaxy clusters grow by mergers with smaller subclusters and galaxy groups. In this talk, I will discuss how merging galaxy clusters can act as giant particle accelerators, producing extremely energetic cosmic rays.
Host: Charles Alcock
Speaker: Reinout van Weeren

published: 27 Apr 2017

The Hot and Energetic Universe - Virtual Reality

http://www.eso.org/public/videos/ahead-xray/
The VR documentary “The Hot and EnergeticUniverse” presents with the use of Immersive Visualisations and real images the achievements of the modern astronomy, the most advanced terrestrial and orbital observatories, the basic principles electromagnetic radiation and the natural phenomena related to the High Energy Astrophysics.
High Energy Astrophysics plays a key role in understanding the universe. These radiations reveal the processes in the hot and violent universe.
High Energy Astrophysics probes hot gas in clusters of galaxies, which are the most massive objects in the universe. It also probes hot gas accreting around supermassive black holes in the centers of galaxies.
Finally, high energy radiation provides important information about...

Original video. This video shows orbs as intelligent & emotional cosmic energy particles in the forms of light & plasma. The orbs inside the orb cluster nucleus (the glowing orb cluster) are larger than the orbs outside of the orb cluster nucleus. There are fewer orb clusters in the glowing orb cluster nucleus than outside of the orb cluster nucleus in the general body of orb clusters comprising the grand orb cluster. The orb clusters inside the orb cluster nucleus are larger in size and are revolving counter-clockwise at a high velocities and high vibrations frequencies rates. Their velocities of counter-clockwise revoulutions and their high vibrations frequencies are creating a plasma state orb cluster nucleus which at times attains a state of pure energy/light - this happens when ...

Chandra Presents the Rosette Nebula

The Rosette star formation region is located about 5,000 light years from Earth. X-rays reveal hundreds of young stars clustered in the center of a new image ...

The Rosette star formation region is located about 5,000 light years from Earth. X-rays reveal hundreds of young stars clustered in the center of a new image taken by the Chandra X-ray Observatory, and additional fainter clusters on either side. The Rosette Nebula has long been a favorite target of amateur astronomers in the constellation Monoceros, the Unicorn, and can be occasionally seen by small telescopes from earth.

The Rosette star formation region is located about 5,000 light years from Earth. X-rays reveal hundreds of young stars clustered in the center of a new image taken by the Chandra X-ray Observatory, and additional fainter clusters on either side. The Rosette Nebula has long been a favorite target of amateur astronomers in the constellation Monoceros, the Unicorn, and can be occasionally seen by small telescopes from earth.

Public Lecture | Galaxy Clusters and the Life and Death of the Universe

The distribution of galaxies in the universe is patchy. Galaxies are bound together in clusters made of stars, hot gas and invisible dark matter. These galaxy c...

The distribution of galaxies in the universe is patchy. Galaxies are bound together in clusters made of stars, hot gas and invisible dark matter. These galaxy clusters are part of a cosmic web of filaments, nodes and empty voids that has been building up over 13 billion years. How do we observe this structure, and how do we use gravitational lensing and satellite X-ray observations to measure its mass? How do galaxy clusters trace the past expansion of the universe and reveal our future? This lecture highlights data from the Dark Energy Survey, today’s largest cosmic survey, to answer these questions.
About the speaker:
SLACResearch Scientist Eli Rykoff has been weighing the universe for over a decade. He received his PhD from the University of Michigan in 2005, where he built a worldwide network of automated telescopes for following gamma-ray bursts, the most energetic explosions in the universe. After graduating, he transitioned to studying galaxy clusters, which evolve over billions of years rather than fractions of seconds, and did postdoctoral research at the University of California, Santa Barbara and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Rykoff moved to SLAC in 2012, where he works on galaxy cluster finding and other studies for the Dark Energy Survey and the upcoming Large Synoptic Survey Telescope. He also develops educational astronomy apps for the iPhone and iPad, including CosmoCalc, a full-featured cosmological calculator, and GravLens3, a gravitational lens simulator.

The distribution of galaxies in the universe is patchy. Galaxies are bound together in clusters made of stars, hot gas and invisible dark matter. These galaxy clusters are part of a cosmic web of filaments, nodes and empty voids that has been building up over 13 billion years. How do we observe this structure, and how do we use gravitational lensing and satellite X-ray observations to measure its mass? How do galaxy clusters trace the past expansion of the universe and reveal our future? This lecture highlights data from the Dark Energy Survey, today’s largest cosmic survey, to answer these questions.
About the speaker:
SLACResearch Scientist Eli Rykoff has been weighing the universe for over a decade. He received his PhD from the University of Michigan in 2005, where he built a worldwide network of automated telescopes for following gamma-ray bursts, the most energetic explosions in the universe. After graduating, he transitioned to studying galaxy clusters, which evolve over billions of years rather than fractions of seconds, and did postdoctoral research at the University of California, Santa Barbara and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Rykoff moved to SLAC in 2012, where he works on galaxy cluster finding and other studies for the Dark Energy Survey and the upcoming Large Synoptic Survey Telescope. He also develops educational astronomy apps for the iPhone and iPad, including CosmoCalc, a full-featured cosmological calculator, and GravLens3, a gravitational lens simulator.

The Lynx Space Telescope: A Flagship Concept to Probe the Energetic Universe

Lynx is one of four flagship concepts for the next great space telescope.
NASA has funded a series of studies of four concepts that will in less than a year'...

Lynx is one of four flagship concepts for the next great space telescope.
NASA has funded a series of studies of four concepts that will in less than a year's time produce candidate designs for a major space observatory to begin construction later next decade. One of these has been dubbed Lynx, an x-ray “flagship" mission will probe some of the most explosive and high-energy objects in our Universe, and will provide insight into the seeds of black holes, the formation and evolution of galaxies and clusters of galaxies and even of the stars themselves.
Please join our regular hosts Tony Darnell and Harley Thronson, as they discuss with Drs. Alexey Vikhlinin from the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory and Feryal Ozel from the University of Arizona the science that will be revealed by a telescope investigating the x-ray universe.
This is an informal, relaxed chat, so we hope that you can join us live and ask questions or leave comments for our guests.
Learn more here: https://www.lynxobservatory.com
Visuals from hangout available here:
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1E8WAxeRmkIDZzdxTCDVuwJ8Sw0U3IMDL
Join our Discord Chat Server here: https://discord.gg/nqGpvtK

Lynx is one of four flagship concepts for the next great space telescope.
NASA has funded a series of studies of four concepts that will in less than a year's time produce candidate designs for a major space observatory to begin construction later next decade. One of these has been dubbed Lynx, an x-ray “flagship" mission will probe some of the most explosive and high-energy objects in our Universe, and will provide insight into the seeds of black holes, the formation and evolution of galaxies and clusters of galaxies and even of the stars themselves.
Please join our regular hosts Tony Darnell and Harley Thronson, as they discuss with Drs. Alexey Vikhlinin from the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory and Feryal Ozel from the University of Arizona the science that will be revealed by a telescope investigating the x-ray universe.
This is an informal, relaxed chat, so we hope that you can join us live and ask questions or leave comments for our guests.
Learn more here: https://www.lynxobservatory.com
Visuals from hangout available here:
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1E8WAxeRmkIDZzdxTCDVuwJ8Sw0U3IMDL
Join our Discord Chat Server here: https://discord.gg/nqGpvtK

Violent Galaxy Cluster Collision Creates Particle Beam | Video

More space news and info at: http://www.coconutsciencelab.com - Abell 3411 and Abell 3412 are a pair of colliding galaxy clusters located about 2 billion light ...

More space news and info at: http://www.coconutsciencelab.com - Abell 3411 and Abell 3412 are a pair of colliding galaxy clusters located about 2 billion light years from Earth. By combining X-rays from Chandra with data from other telescopes, astronomers were able to probe what was really happening in this remarkable system.
They found evidence that supermassive black holes have erupted within the merging clusters. At least one of these black hole eruptions has produced a tightly-wound, rotating magnetic funnel, which in turn has created a jet of high-speed and energetic particles.
These pumped up particles have then been swept up in the collision between Abell 3411 and Abell 3412, creating a cosmic double whammy. The result of all of this? The creation of a stupendous particle accelerator that produces energies far above anything that could ever be created here on Earth.
Please rate and comment, thanks!

More space news and info at: http://www.coconutsciencelab.com - Abell 3411 and Abell 3412 are a pair of colliding galaxy clusters located about 2 billion light years from Earth. By combining X-rays from Chandra with data from other telescopes, astronomers were able to probe what was really happening in this remarkable system.
They found evidence that supermassive black holes have erupted within the merging clusters. At least one of these black hole eruptions has produced a tightly-wound, rotating magnetic funnel, which in turn has created a jet of high-speed and energetic particles.
These pumped up particles have then been swept up in the collision between Abell 3411 and Abell 3412, creating a cosmic double whammy. The result of all of this? The creation of a stupendous particle accelerator that produces energies far above anything that could ever be created here on Earth.
Please rate and comment, thanks!

http://www.facebook.com/ScienceReason ... Hubblecast 37: EnergeticStar Formation - Bubbles And BabyStars
This Hubblecast features a spectacular new NASA/ESAHubble Space Telescope image - one of the largest ever released of a star-forming region. It highlights N11, part of a complex network of gas clouds and star clusters within our neighbouring galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud. This region of energetic star formation is one of the most active in the nearby Universe.
---
Please SUBSCRIBE to Science & Reason:
• http://www.youtube.com/Best0fScience
• http://www.youtube.com/ScienceTV
• http://www.youtube.com/FFreeThinker
---
Hubble captures bubbles and baby stars
The Large Magellanic Cloud contains many bright bubbles of glowing gas. One of the largest and most spectacular has the name LHA 120-N 11, from its listing in a catalogue compiled by the American astronomer and astronaut Karl Henize in 1956, and is informally known as N11. Close up, the billowing pink clouds of glowing gas make N11 resemble a puffy swirl of fairground candy floss. From further away, its distinctive overall shape led some observers to nickname it the BeanNebula. The dramatic and colourful features visible in the nebula are the telltale signs of star formation. N11 is a well-studied region that extends over 1000 light-years. It is the second largest star-forming region within the Large Magellanic Cloud and has produced some of the most massive stars known.
It is the process of star formation that gives N11 its distinctive look. Three successive generations of stars, each of which formed further away from the centre of the nebula than the last, have created shells of gas and dust. These shells were blown away from the newborn stars in the turmoil of their energetic birth and early life, creating the ring shapes so prominent in this image.
Beans are not the only terrestrial shapes to be found in this spectacular high resolution image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. In the upper left is the red bloom of nebula LHA 120-N 11A. Its rose-like petals of gas and dust are illuminated from within, thanks to the radiation from the massive hot stars at its centre. N11A is relatively compact and dense and is the site of the most recent burst of star development in the region.
Other star clusters abound in N11, including NGC 1761 at the bottom of the image, which is a group of massive hot young stars busily pouring intense ultraviolet radiation out into space. Although it is much smaller than our own galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud is a very vigorous region of star formation. Studying these stellar nurseries helps astronomers understand a lot more about how stars are born and their ultimate development and lifespan.
Both the Large Magellanic Cloud and its small companion, the Small Magellanic Cloud, are easily seen with the unaided eye and have always been familiar to people living in the southern hemisphere. The credit for bringing these galaxies to the attention of Europeans is usually given to Portuguese explorerFernando de Magellan and his crew, who viewed it on their 1519 sea voyage. However, the Persian astronomer Abd Al-Rahman Al Sufi and the Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci recorded the Large Magellanic Cloud in 964 and 1503 respectively.
• http://www.spacetelescope.org/news/heic1011/
---
A rose blooming in space
Resembling a delicate rose floating in space, the nebula N11A is seen in a new light in a true-colour image taken by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. Fierce radiation from massive stars embedded at the centre of N11A illuminates the surrounding gas with a soft fluorescent glow.
N11A lies within a spectacular star-forming region in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a small nearby companion galaxy to our own Milky Way Galaxy, visible from the Southern Hemisphere. This nebula is particularly interesting for astronomers since it is the smallest and most compact nebula in that region and represents the most recent massive star formation event there.
The excellent imaging power of Hubble has enabled astronomers to see this nebula in more detail and to study the structure of the hot gas envelope as well as the stars embedded in its centre. Shocks and strong stellar winds from the recently born, massive stars in the bright core of N11A have scooped out a cavity in the gas and dust. The fierce radiation causes the surrounding gas to fluoresce in a way similar to a neon light.
• http://www.spacetelescope.org/news/heic0210/
.

http://www.facebook.com/ScienceReason ... Hubblecast 37: EnergeticStar Formation - Bubbles And BabyStars
This Hubblecast features a spectacular new NASA/ESAHubble Space Telescope image - one of the largest ever released of a star-forming region. It highlights N11, part of a complex network of gas clouds and star clusters within our neighbouring galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud. This region of energetic star formation is one of the most active in the nearby Universe.
---
Please SUBSCRIBE to Science & Reason:
• http://www.youtube.com/Best0fScience
• http://www.youtube.com/ScienceTV
• http://www.youtube.com/FFreeThinker
---
Hubble captures bubbles and baby stars
The Large Magellanic Cloud contains many bright bubbles of glowing gas. One of the largest and most spectacular has the name LHA 120-N 11, from its listing in a catalogue compiled by the American astronomer and astronaut Karl Henize in 1956, and is informally known as N11. Close up, the billowing pink clouds of glowing gas make N11 resemble a puffy swirl of fairground candy floss. From further away, its distinctive overall shape led some observers to nickname it the BeanNebula. The dramatic and colourful features visible in the nebula are the telltale signs of star formation. N11 is a well-studied region that extends over 1000 light-years. It is the second largest star-forming region within the Large Magellanic Cloud and has produced some of the most massive stars known.
It is the process of star formation that gives N11 its distinctive look. Three successive generations of stars, each of which formed further away from the centre of the nebula than the last, have created shells of gas and dust. These shells were blown away from the newborn stars in the turmoil of their energetic birth and early life, creating the ring shapes so prominent in this image.
Beans are not the only terrestrial shapes to be found in this spectacular high resolution image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. In the upper left is the red bloom of nebula LHA 120-N 11A. Its rose-like petals of gas and dust are illuminated from within, thanks to the radiation from the massive hot stars at its centre. N11A is relatively compact and dense and is the site of the most recent burst of star development in the region.
Other star clusters abound in N11, including NGC 1761 at the bottom of the image, which is a group of massive hot young stars busily pouring intense ultraviolet radiation out into space. Although it is much smaller than our own galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud is a very vigorous region of star formation. Studying these stellar nurseries helps astronomers understand a lot more about how stars are born and their ultimate development and lifespan.
Both the Large Magellanic Cloud and its small companion, the Small Magellanic Cloud, are easily seen with the unaided eye and have always been familiar to people living in the southern hemisphere. The credit for bringing these galaxies to the attention of Europeans is usually given to Portuguese explorerFernando de Magellan and his crew, who viewed it on their 1519 sea voyage. However, the Persian astronomer Abd Al-Rahman Al Sufi and the Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci recorded the Large Magellanic Cloud in 964 and 1503 respectively.
• http://www.spacetelescope.org/news/heic1011/
---
A rose blooming in space
Resembling a delicate rose floating in space, the nebula N11A is seen in a new light in a true-colour image taken by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. Fierce radiation from massive stars embedded at the centre of N11A illuminates the surrounding gas with a soft fluorescent glow.
N11A lies within a spectacular star-forming region in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a small nearby companion galaxy to our own Milky Way Galaxy, visible from the Southern Hemisphere. This nebula is particularly interesting for astronomers since it is the smallest and most compact nebula in that region and represents the most recent massive star formation event there.
The excellent imaging power of Hubble has enabled astronomers to see this nebula in more detail and to study the structure of the hot gas envelope as well as the stars embedded in its centre. Shocks and strong stellar winds from the recently born, massive stars in the bright core of N11A have scooped out a cavity in the gas and dust. The fierce radiation causes the surrounding gas to fluoresce in a way similar to a neon light.
• http://www.spacetelescope.org/news/heic0210/
.

Energetic Energies by Akihisa Hirata

Japanese designer and architect Akihisa Hirata describes his installation for Panasonic, part of INTERNI: HYBRID ARCHITECTURE & DESIGN in Milan2013.
The main ...

Japanese designer and architect Akihisa Hirata describes his installation for Panasonic, part of INTERNI: HYBRID ARCHITECTURE & DESIGN in Milan2013.
The main presentation is a 30-meter-long miniature cityscape, with 6,000 solar panels covering clusters of buildings. The panels create rolling hills over the manmade city. Visual and acoustic effects emanate from 16 projectors with speakers dotted about the hillsides.
Follow #beopen for all the best form the world of Design, Architecture and Arts.
http://www.beopenfuture.com

Japanese designer and architect Akihisa Hirata describes his installation for Panasonic, part of INTERNI: HYBRID ARCHITECTURE & DESIGN in Milan2013.
The main presentation is a 30-meter-long miniature cityscape, with 6,000 solar panels covering clusters of buildings. The panels create rolling hills over the manmade city. Visual and acoustic effects emanate from 16 projectors with speakers dotted about the hillsides.
Follow #beopen for all the best form the world of Design, Architecture and Arts.
http://www.beopenfuture.com

Original video. This video shows orbs as intelligent & emotional cosmic energy particles in the forms of light & plasma. The orbs inside the orb cluster nucleus (the glowing orb cluster) are larger than the orbs outside of the orb cluster nucleus. There are fewer orb clusters in the glowing orb cluster nucleus than outside of the orb cluster nucleus in the general body of orb clusters comprising the grand orb cluster. The orb clusters inside the orb cluster nucleus are larger in size and are revolving counter-clockwise at a high velocities and high vibrations frequencies rates. Their velocities of counter-clockwise revoulutions and their high vibrations frequencies are creating a plasma state orb cluster nucleus which at times attains a state of pure energy/light - this happens when the velocities and vibrations frequencies of the orb clusters inside the nucleus are at their highest levels - these changes are shown in this video. The orb clusters outside of the glowing orb cluster nucleus are revolving counter-clockwise around the glowing orb cluster nucleus at extreme velocities and are at high vibration frequencies - traveling counter-clockwise around the nucleus well in excess of 1000km/hour and are hard to see due to their high acceleration rate. They are moving right to left over the roof, in the air and all around the glowing orb cluster nucleus counter-clockwise in all directions without colliding with one another or interfering with one another's paths, direction, velocities, etc. The right to left movement is the easiest to notice and to watch on the screen but the movement is counter-clockwise & right to left in all directions even when it is not appearant to the eyes. The orb clusters in this video are intelligent cosmic energy microparticles traveling at extreme high velocities at high vibration frequencies. They are so small, move so fast & their vibration frquencies are so high that they pass right through solid animate and inanimate matter - cell and atomic/sub-atomic structure, etc., without even being felt or seen. This does not mean however, that these intelligent cosmic particles have no effect on animate & inanimate physical matter. They can & do change cell, membrane, atomic & subatomic structures in living organisms and inanimate objects of solid matter. They can alter living organisms on a microscopic cellular level causing changes, upgrades, deformities, leaps in intelligence or changes in mental patterns so that these living organisms will experience changes in perception via senses and understanding of themselves, their role in their world and the meaning of their existance due to changes in their brain wave pattern activities and changes in their electrochemical impulses in their brain together with external changes of their environment and the effect of the electromagnetic field/energy and vibration frquencies changes all around them in the physical world. These intelligent cosmic energy particles can also influence changes and alter the periodic table of elements by adding or subtracting from the atomic number thereby changing the qualitative state of physical objects by increasing or decreasing the energy values in their atomic/sub- atomic structure. Orbs/UEBs/intelligent cosmic energy particles have been around on Earth for the length of its entire existence and have shaped life and matter continuously for billions of years. These intelligent cosmic particles shape life and matter in our entire universe and affect the energy intensities, quantities & patterns even inside black holes. These intelligent cosmic energy particles operate in the electromagnetic spectrum and shape the universe on an electromagnetic grid network. They can operate on all energy vibration frequencies including, electromagnetism, radiation, cosmic radiation, solar radiation/ultraviolet, dark matter, matter, gravitational force, visible light spectrum, etc. are but a few examples. These intelligent cosmic energy particles are multidimensional cluster organisms/living beings of extraterrestrial, extradimensional nature and origin with respect to human beings, the Earth, life on Earth, etc., which have the capability to transform from energy states into physical forms - either as living/animate organisms/beings or as physical/solid objects in the three dimensional universe.
Thank you for viewing.

Original video. This video shows orbs as intelligent & emotional cosmic energy particles in the forms of light & plasma. The orbs inside the orb cluster nucleus (the glowing orb cluster) are larger than the orbs outside of the orb cluster nucleus. There are fewer orb clusters in the glowing orb cluster nucleus than outside of the orb cluster nucleus in the general body of orb clusters comprising the grand orb cluster. The orb clusters inside the orb cluster nucleus are larger in size and are revolving counter-clockwise at a high velocities and high vibrations frequencies rates. Their velocities of counter-clockwise revoulutions and their high vibrations frequencies are creating a plasma state orb cluster nucleus which at times attains a state of pure energy/light - this happens when the velocities and vibrations frequencies of the orb clusters inside the nucleus are at their highest levels - these changes are shown in this video. The orb clusters outside of the glowing orb cluster nucleus are revolving counter-clockwise around the glowing orb cluster nucleus at extreme velocities and are at high vibration frequencies - traveling counter-clockwise around the nucleus well in excess of 1000km/hour and are hard to see due to their high acceleration rate. They are moving right to left over the roof, in the air and all around the glowing orb cluster nucleus counter-clockwise in all directions without colliding with one another or interfering with one another's paths, direction, velocities, etc. The right to left movement is the easiest to notice and to watch on the screen but the movement is counter-clockwise & right to left in all directions even when it is not appearant to the eyes. The orb clusters in this video are intelligent cosmic energy microparticles traveling at extreme high velocities at high vibration frequencies. They are so small, move so fast & their vibration frquencies are so high that they pass right through solid animate and inanimate matter - cell and atomic/sub-atomic structure, etc., without even being felt or seen. This does not mean however, that these intelligent cosmic particles have no effect on animate & inanimate physical matter. They can & do change cell, membrane, atomic & subatomic structures in living organisms and inanimate objects of solid matter. They can alter living organisms on a microscopic cellular level causing changes, upgrades, deformities, leaps in intelligence or changes in mental patterns so that these living organisms will experience changes in perception via senses and understanding of themselves, their role in their world and the meaning of their existance due to changes in their brain wave pattern activities and changes in their electrochemical impulses in their brain together with external changes of their environment and the effect of the electromagnetic field/energy and vibration frquencies changes all around them in the physical world. These intelligent cosmic energy particles can also influence changes and alter the periodic table of elements by adding or subtracting from the atomic number thereby changing the qualitative state of physical objects by increasing or decreasing the energy values in their atomic/sub- atomic structure. Orbs/UEBs/intelligent cosmic energy particles have been around on Earth for the length of its entire existence and have shaped life and matter continuously for billions of years. These intelligent cosmic particles shape life and matter in our entire universe and affect the energy intensities, quantities & patterns even inside black holes. These intelligent cosmic energy particles operate in the electromagnetic spectrum and shape the universe on an electromagnetic grid network. They can operate on all energy vibration frequencies including, electromagnetism, radiation, cosmic radiation, solar radiation/ultraviolet, dark matter, matter, gravitational force, visible light spectrum, etc. are but a few examples. These intelligent cosmic energy particles are multidimensional cluster organisms/living beings of extraterrestrial, extradimensional nature and origin with respect to human beings, the Earth, life on Earth, etc., which have the capability to transform from energy states into physical forms - either as living/animate organisms/beings or as physical/solid objects in the three dimensional universe.
Thank you for viewing.

Chandra Presents the Rosette Nebula

The Rosette star formation region is located about 5,000 light years from Earth. X-rays reveal hundreds of young stars clustered in the center of a new image taken by the Chandra X-ray Observatory, and additional fainter clusters on either side. The Rosette Nebula has long been a favorite target of amateur astronomers in the constellation Monoceros, the Unicorn, and can be occasionally seen by small telescopes from earth.

Public Lecture | Galaxy Clusters and the Life and Death of the Universe

The distribution of galaxies in the universe is patchy. Galaxies are bound together in clusters made of stars, hot gas and invisible dark matter. These galaxy clusters are part of a cosmic web of filaments, nodes and empty voids that has been building up over 13 billion years. How do we observe this structure, and how do we use gravitational lensing and satellite X-ray observations to measure its mass? How do galaxy clusters trace the past expansion of the universe and reveal our future? This lecture highlights data from the Dark Energy Survey, today’s largest cosmic survey, to answer these questions.
About the speaker:
SLACResearch Scientist Eli Rykoff has been weighing the universe for over a decade. He received his PhD from the University of Michigan in 2005, where he built a worldwide network of automated telescopes for following gamma-ray bursts, the most energetic explosions in the universe. After graduating, he transitioned to studying galaxy clusters, which evolve over billions of years rather than fractions of seconds, and did postdoctoral research at the University of California, Santa Barbara and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Rykoff moved to SLAC in 2012, where he works on galaxy cluster finding and other studies for the Dark Energy Survey and the upcoming Large Synoptic Survey Telescope. He also develops educational astronomy apps for the iPhone and iPad, including CosmoCalc, a full-featured cosmological calculator, and GravLens3, a gravitational lens simulator.

The Lynx Space Telescope: A Flagship Concept to Probe the Energetic Universe

Lynx is one of four flagship concepts for the next great space telescope.
NASA has funded a series of studies of four concepts that will in less than a year's time produce candidate designs for a major space observatory to begin construction later next decade. One of these has been dubbed Lynx, an x-ray “flagship" mission will probe some of the most explosive and high-energy objects in our Universe, and will provide insight into the seeds of black holes, the formation and evolution of galaxies and clusters of galaxies and even of the stars themselves.
Please join our regular hosts Tony Darnell and Harley Thronson, as they discuss with Drs. Alexey Vikhlinin from the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory and Feryal Ozel from the University of Arizona the science that will be revealed by a telescope investigating the x-ray universe.
This is an informal, relaxed chat, so we hope that you can join us live and ask questions or leave comments for our guests.
Learn more here: https://www.lynxobservatory.com
Visuals from hangout available here:
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1E8WAxeRmkIDZzdxTCDVuwJ8Sw0U3IMDL
Join our Discord Chat Server here: https://discord.gg/nqGpvtK

Violent Galaxy Cluster Collision Creates Particle Beam | Video

More space news and info at: http://www.coconutsciencelab.com - Abell 3411 and Abell 3412 are a pair of colliding galaxy clusters located about 2 billion light years from Earth. By combining X-rays from Chandra with data from other telescopes, astronomers were able to probe what was really happening in this remarkable system.
They found evidence that supermassive black holes have erupted within the merging clusters. At least one of these black hole eruptions has produced a tightly-wound, rotating magnetic funnel, which in turn has created a jet of high-speed and energetic particles.
These pumped up particles have then been swept up in the collision between Abell 3411 and Abell 3412, creating a cosmic double whammy. The result of all of this? The creation of a stupendous particle accelerator that produces energies far above anything that could ever be created here on Earth.
Please rate and comment, thanks!

Energetic Star Formation: Bubbles And Baby Stars

http://www.facebook.com/ScienceReason ... Hubblecast 37: EnergeticStar Formation - Bubbles And BabyStars
This Hubblecast features a spectacular new NASA/ESAHubble Space Telescope image - one of the largest ever released of a star-forming region. It highlights N11, part of a complex network of gas clouds and star clusters within our neighbouring galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud. This region of energetic star formation is one of the most active in the nearby Universe.
---
Please SUBSCRIBE to Science & Reason:
• http://www.youtube.com/Best0fScience
• http://www.youtube.com/ScienceTV
• http://www.youtube.com/FFreeThinker
---
Hubble captures bubbles and baby stars
The Large Magellanic Cloud contains many bright bubbles of glowing gas. One of the largest and most spectacular has the name LHA 120-N 11, from its listing in a catalogue compiled by the American astronomer and astronaut Karl Henize in 1956, and is informally known as N11. Close up, the billowing pink clouds of glowing gas make N11 resemble a puffy swirl of fairground candy floss. From further away, its distinctive overall shape led some observers to nickname it the BeanNebula. The dramatic and colourful features visible in the nebula are the telltale signs of star formation. N11 is a well-studied region that extends over 1000 light-years. It is the second largest star-forming region within the Large Magellanic Cloud and has produced some of the most massive stars known.
It is the process of star formation that gives N11 its distinctive look. Three successive generations of stars, each of which formed further away from the centre of the nebula than the last, have created shells of gas and dust. These shells were blown away from the newborn stars in the turmoil of their energetic birth and early life, creating the ring shapes so prominent in this image.
Beans are not the only terrestrial shapes to be found in this spectacular high resolution image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. In the upper left is the red bloom of nebula LHA 120-N 11A. Its rose-like petals of gas and dust are illuminated from within, thanks to the radiation from the massive hot stars at its centre. N11A is relatively compact and dense and is the site of the most recent burst of star development in the region.
Other star clusters abound in N11, including NGC 1761 at the bottom of the image, which is a group of massive hot young stars busily pouring intense ultraviolet radiation out into space. Although it is much smaller than our own galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud is a very vigorous region of star formation. Studying these stellar nurseries helps astronomers understand a lot more about how stars are born and their ultimate development and lifespan.
Both the Large Magellanic Cloud and its small companion, the Small Magellanic Cloud, are easily seen with the unaided eye and have always been familiar to people living in the southern hemisphere. The credit for bringing these galaxies to the attention of Europeans is usually given to Portuguese explorerFernando de Magellan and his crew, who viewed it on their 1519 sea voyage. However, the Persian astronomer Abd Al-Rahman Al Sufi and the Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci recorded the Large Magellanic Cloud in 964 and 1503 respectively.
• http://www.spacetelescope.org/news/heic1011/
---
A rose blooming in space
Resembling a delicate rose floating in space, the nebula N11A is seen in a new light in a true-colour image taken by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. Fierce radiation from massive stars embedded at the centre of N11A illuminates the surrounding gas with a soft fluorescent glow.
N11A lies within a spectacular star-forming region in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a small nearby companion galaxy to our own Milky Way Galaxy, visible from the Southern Hemisphere. This nebula is particularly interesting for astronomers since it is the smallest and most compact nebula in that region and represents the most recent massive star formation event there.
The excellent imaging power of Hubble has enabled astronomers to see this nebula in more detail and to study the structure of the hot gas envelope as well as the stars embedded in its centre. Shocks and strong stellar winds from the recently born, massive stars in the bright core of N11A have scooped out a cavity in the gas and dust. The fierce radiation causes the surrounding gas to fluoresce in a way similar to a neon light.
• http://www.spacetelescope.org/news/heic0210/
.

Energetic Energies by Akihisa Hirata

Japanese designer and architect Akihisa Hirata describes his installation for Panasonic, part of INTERNI: HYBRID ARCHITECTURE & DESIGN in Milan2013.
The main presentation is a 30-meter-long miniature cityscape, with 6,000 solar panels covering clusters of buildings. The panels create rolling hills over the manmade city. Visual and acoustic effects emanate from 16 projectors with speakers dotted about the hillsides.
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Original video. This video shows orbs as intelligent & emotional cosmic energy particles in the forms of light & plasma. The orbs inside the orb cluster nucleus (the glowing orb cluster) are larger than the orbs outside of the orb cluster nucleus. There are fewer orb clusters in the glowing orb cluster nucleus than outside of the orb cluster nucleus in the general body of orb clusters comprising the grand orb cluster. The orb clusters inside the orb cluster nucleus are larger in size and are revolving counter-clockwise at a high velocities and high vibrations frequencies rates. Their velocities of counter-clockwise revoulutions and their high vibrations frequencies are creating a plasma state orb cluster nucleus which at times attains a state of pure energy/light - this happens when the velocities and vibrations frequencies of the orb clusters inside the nucleus are at their highest levels - these changes are shown in this video. The orb clusters outside of the glowing orb cluster nucleus are revolving counter-clockwise around the glowing orb cluster nucleus at extreme velocities and are at high vibration frequencies - traveling counter-clockwise around the nucleus well in excess of 1000km/hour and are hard to see due to their high acceleration rate. They are moving right to left over the roof, in the air and all around the glowing orb cluster nucleus counter-clockwise in all directions without colliding with one another or interfering with one another's paths, direction, velocities, etc. The right to left movement is the easiest to notice and to watch on the screen but the movement is counter-clockwise & right to left in all directions even when it is not appearant to the eyes. The orb clusters in this video are intelligent cosmic energy microparticles traveling at extreme high velocities at high vibration frequencies. They are so small, move so fast & their vibration frquencies are so high that they pass right through solid animate and inanimate matter - cell and atomic/sub-atomic structure, etc., without even being felt or seen. This does not mean however, that these intelligent cosmic particles have no effect on animate & inanimate physical matter. They can & do change cell, membrane, atomic & subatomic structures in living organisms and inanimate objects of solid matter. They can alter living organisms on a microscopic cellular level causing changes, upgrades, deformities, leaps in intelligence or changes in mental patterns so that these living organisms will experience changes in perception via senses and understanding of themselves, their role in their world and the meaning of their existance due to changes in their brain wave pattern activities and changes in their electrochemical impulses in their brain together with external changes of their environment and the effect of the electromagnetic field/energy and vibration frquencies changes all around them in the physical world. These intelligent cosmic energy particles can also influence changes and alter the periodic table of elements by adding or subtracting from the atomic number thereby changing the qualitative state of physical objects by increasing or decreasing the energy values in their atomic/sub- atomic structure. Orbs/UEBs/intelligent cosmic energy particles have been around on Earth for the length of its entire existence and have shaped life and matter continuously for billions of years. These intelligent cosmic particles shape life and matter in our entire universe and affect the energy intensities, quantities & patterns even inside black holes. These intelligent cosmic energy particles operate in the electromagnetic spectrum and shape the universe on an electromagnetic grid network. They can operate on all energy vibration frequencies including, electromagnetism, radiation, cosmic radiation, solar radiation/ultraviolet, dark matter, matter, gravitational force, visible light spectrum, etc. are but a few examples. These intelligent cosmic energy particles are multidimensional cluster organisms/living beings of extraterrestrial, extradimensional nature and origin with respect to human beings, the Earth, life on Earth, etc., which have the capability to transform from energy states into physical forms - either as living/animate organisms/beings or as physical/solid objects in the three dimensional universe.
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Trousers

Trousers (pants in North America) are an item of clothing worn from the waist to the ankles, covering both legs separately (rather than with cloth extending across both legs as in robes, skirts, and dresses).

In the UK the word "pants" generally means underwear and not trousers.Shorts are similar to trousers, but with legs that come down only to around the area of the knee, higher or lower depending on the style of the garment. To distinguish them from shorts, trousers may be called "long trousers" in certain contexts such as school uniform, where tailored shorts may be called "short trousers", especially in the UK.

In most of the Western world, trousers have been worn since ancient times and throughout the Medieval period, becoming the most common form of lower-body clothing for adult males in the modern world, although shorts are also widely worn, and kilts and other garments may be worn in various regions and cultures. Breeches were worn instead of trousers in early modern Europe by some men in higher classes of society. Since the mid-20th century, trousers have increasingly been worn by women as well. Jeans, made of denim, are a form of trousers for casual wear, now widely worn all over the world by both sexes. Shorts are often preferred in hot weather or for some sports and also often by children and teenagers. Trousers are worn on the hips or waist and may be held up by their own fastenings, a belt or suspenders (braces). Leggings are form-fitting trousers, of a clingy material, often knittedcotton and spandex (elastane).